Iraq summons Turkish diplomat to slam military base visit by minister

Iraq’s foreign ministry summoned Turkey's chargé d’affairs to Baghdad to express its strong resentment at a visit by the Turkish defence minister to a military base in the north of the country.
Senior
undersecretary Nizar Al-Khairalla handed the diplomat a formal note of protest,
complaining that Turkey was breaking international law by infringing on Iraq’s
territorial integrity, the ministry said on Monday.
“The Iraqi government expressed its strong
resentment and condemnation of the presence of Turkish Defence Minister Hulusi
Akar in Iraqi territory and meeting with Turkish forces that are illegally
present there without coordination or prior approval by the relevant
authorities in Iraq,” the
ministry said.
Akar
visited Turkish troops based in Kurdish-controlled northern Iraq on Saturday,
meeting with commanders leading ongoing operations against the Kurdistan
Workers’ Party (PKK). Turkey has established military bases and outposts in the
region to battle the PKK, which has battled for Kurdish autonomy from Turkey
for four decades and is recognised as a terrorist group by the United States
and the European Union.
Iraq
also condemned a statement by Turkish Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu about
plans to establish a permanent military base in northern Iraq.
“The Iraqi government categorically rejects the
continuing violations of Iraqi sovereignty and sanctity of its lands and
airspace by the Turkish military forces, and that continuing with such an
approach is not consistent with friendly relations, good neighbourliness, and
standing international laws and norms.”
During
the visit to the military base, Akar handed over a Turkish flag to troops and
congratulated them for “neutralising” 44 PKK members during operations in the
area, the defence ministry said in a statement on Sunday. The military’s chief
of staff Yaşar Güler and land forces commander Ümit Dündar accompanied Akar on
the visit.
Turkey
stepped up military operations in the region late last month. Intense clashes
have terrified villagers and forced families to flee their homes, local Kurdish
officials told the Rudaw news website in an article published on Monday.